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  1. Mar 9, 2024 · The African cheetah, the wild cheetah, and the Asiatic cheetah Acinonyx jubatus venaticus, all share a unique social structure that sets them apart from other big cats such as leopards. Adult cheetahs are typically solitary, with isolation being a key element of the cheetah behavior.

  2. Cheetahs live in small social groups comprised of related females and their offspring. They form close bonds and engage in cooperative behaviors such as grooming and caring for each other’s young. Living in groups provides advantages such as protection from predators and access to resources.

  3. Cheetahs engage in various social interactions within their groups, which help strengthen bonds and maintain group cohesion. One of the most important social behaviors is grooming, where cheetahs engage in mutual grooming sessions to clean each other’s fur and establish social connections.

  4. Cheetahs live in three main social groups: females and their cubs, male "coalitions", and solitary males. Females lead a nomadic life searching for prey in large home ranges, while males are more sedentary and instead establish much smaller territories in areas with plentiful prey and access to females.

  5. Social structure and reproduction. Unlike lions, cheetahs don’t live in groups. Female cheetahs live on their own, each with a large home range.

  6. Apr 8, 2022 · Cheetahs occupy a unique social structure, known as a coalition. Coalitions are composed of two or more cheetahs that live and hunt together. This social structure allows for efficient hunting and greater numbers of prey. It has also been observed that cheetahs in coalitions are more likely to survive than those living alone.

  7. Cheetahs live in a unique social structure. Females live independently or with their cubs, who stay with their mother until about 18 months of age. In comparison, males live solitarily or, more often, in groups of two to three related or other males, sometimes called ‘coalitions’.

  8. Dec 7, 2018 · Female cheetahs tend to be solitary (when not with dependent young), whereas males tend to form coalitions of two or four (often littermates) – a social organisation that is unique amongst cats. Sometimes brothers accept unrelated males and such unions last from a few weeks to several years.

  9. Dec 7, 2016 · (Adult male cheetahs are sociable, forming groups of two to four that researchers call “coalitions” and are often composed of brothers.) The collars took readings once every hour if the animals...

  10. Behavioral ecology. Cheetahs live predominantly in open habitats with abundant prey although they can be found in diverse habitats such as woodland, savannah and deserts. Their social system is unique within mammalian species.